Police vans and beaconed vehicles patrolled the roads which were still glistening from Tuesday night's sporadic drizzle but nothing could not dampen the spirits of the residents in the tiny north Indian town thrust under the global spotlight.

Image: Pakistani cricket fans pose for a photographer before crossing the Wagah border on TuedayPhotographs: Reuters

"With so many detours (because of road closures), who would want to take out the car? Besides, giant screens have been installed at sector 17, sector 35 and some other places. Either people will watch the match at home or throng those areas."

The high-profile match at the 28,000-seater Punjab Cricket Association Stadium has drawn, among others, prime ministers of both the countries, numerous politicians, industrialists and celebrities.

Unprecedented security blanket in and around the stadium

Rampant black-marketing has been reported and eight people have been arrested so far ahead of the match that assumes even more importance because of what the local media construed India's 'cricket diplomacy'.

An unprecedented security blanket has been thrown in and around the stadium with state and central security agencies joining hands to make sure the match, featuring two nuclear-armed neighbours suspicious of each other, passes without any untoward incident.

Huge influx of tourists

The huge influx of tourists have caught the twin cities of Chandigarh and Mohali by surprise and accommodating the fans, a sizeable number from Pakistan, has become a huge issue with the city authorities.